ABSTRACT

Crisis Management Challenges in Kaliningrad captures the evolving nature of the types of crises faced by a society as it transforms and evolves. Once the westernmost bastion of the Soviet Union and now the westernmost part of the Russian Federation, the Kaliningrad Oblast remains cut off from direct land communication with mainland Russia and provides a condensed, real-life laboratory in which to observe changing political, technological and economic priorities in Post-Soviet society. Expert contributors from the region chart the tensions, problems and opportunities created by the collapse of the Soviet Union in December 1991 and examine the change in status and situation of the Kaliningrad Oblast. By looking at a selection of economic, environmental and social crises a historical link between the Soviet and Post-Soviet eras is formed and rigorously examined.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Kaliningrad: Managing Evolving Crisis Challenges

chapter 2|34 pages

The Cepruss 1 Pulp and Paper Mill

Complex Crisis Management

chapter 3|42 pages

Child Welfare in the Kaliningrad Region

Production of a Creeping Crisis

chapter 4|24 pages

Building a Mosque in Kaliningrad

chapter |20 pages

Conclusion